This isn't an idiom because you can figure it out if you look up the word "pins." It is a SLANG term meaning legs, so you knocked him over.
to get a rise out of: to provoke a response from This idiom is usually used when someone is teased into responding in angerAnother answer:To pin something on someone can be to prove guilt. So if you accuse me of a crime but don't have any credible evidence, you can't pin a charge on me.
on a 3.1 at the bottom of the shaft there is a pin you knock it out then push the shaft out the top
i think she made a mistake on the idiom. In the book it is confusing. ??????
You have to knock out the small round retaining pin and then it comes off.
Bowl a strike or a spare on every throw. A strike is when you knock off all the pins in one go and a spare is when you knock off all the pins in your two throws.
From the sport of wrestling.
Knock it down.
Yes. Depending on the force in which a marble hits the pin.
The idiom 'pin cushion' refers to some who has a lot of body piercing. Although can take on many forms. it is most commonly used refer to a person with many piercings.
No, that's not a good use for a rolling pin
If you open the door wide you will see that it only has a pin sitting in the hinge , just knock it and it should come out with ease.
you get a 9